Real Time Zone OBE: Difficult To Move (54)
It was early morning. I was lying on my bed and suddenly pre-OBE vibrations caught my body. I could see with my eyes into the Real Time zone, a plane between the physical and the astral worlds. I could see my room where my body was actually lying, but it was enormously changed. I relaxed and applied the Third Eye Gazing technique to trigger my OBE. This time my exit was unusually easy.
After that, I realized I was lying in the same place where my actual physical body is lying, but I was unable to move it. I realized I still was in the Real Time Zone, and my physical body was attracting my astral double as a magnet. I have collected all my will power to make an attempt to jump away from my body. It was not easy. Few attempts went unsuccessfully; I was still in the same place. Then I somehow managed to grab some kind of a handle on the sidewall and extract myself away from my physical body. I was moving extremely slow. Meanwhile I could observe the room: it was a room very similar to my bedroom. I could also notice that there was a reverse mirror reflection of my room, but I could also walk into that reflection as well. My sight was somewhat paralyzed, because both of my eyes were looking into the opposite directions. I have closed one of my eyes, and then I could see something. I have tried to do the same with my other eye.
I spent a few moments analyzing the environment. I needed to force my body movements as if my body was rigid and inflexible. One idea was spinning in my head that I should return to my physical body because it is not recommended to be outside of my body for extended periods of time for the first time (even though this was not my first OBE). I crawled back to my body. It was standing on the edge of my bed. I have plunged into it as if it was some kind of diver’s uniform.
I felt I was in my body again. Then I woke up and realized I had an OBE in my dream. In other words, I had to wake up for two times. The first time I returned from my OBE, but I was still dreaming, then I woke up in reality.
1 Comments:
A typical dictionary definition of hypnosis states that it is: a state that resembles sleep but that is induced by suggestion. However, anyone who has tried hypnosis (and any self respecting hypnotist) will tell you that this is a very simplistic view of the subject!
A much better description comes from the Free Online Dictionary which states that hypnosis is: an artificially induced state of consciousness, characterised by heightened suggestibility and receptivity to direction. So what does this mean and how can it be used to your advantage?
Well, the subject of hypnosis has been discussed and pondered since the late 1700s. Many explanations and theories have come and gone though science, however, has yet to supply a valid and well-established definition of how it actually happens. It's fairly unlikely that the scientific community will arrive at a definitive explanation for hypnosis in the near future either, as the untapped resources of our 'mostly' uncharted mind still remain something of a mystery.
However, the general characteristics of hypnosis are well documented. It is a trance state characterized by extreme suggestibility, deep relaxation and heightened imaginative functioning. It's not really like sleep at all, because the subject is alert the whole time. It is most often compared to daydreaming, or the feeling you get when you watch a movie or read a captivating book. You are fully conscious, but you tune out most of the outside world. Your focus is concentrated intensely on the mental processes you are experiencing - if movies didn't provide such disassociation with everyday life and put a person in a very receptive state then they would not be as popular (nor would TV advertising be as effective!). Have you ever stated that a film wasn't great because you just couldn't 'get into it'???
This works very simply; while daydream or watching a movie, an imaginary world becomes almost real to you because it fully engages your emotional responses. Such mental pursuits will on most occasions cause real emotional responses such as fear, sadness or happiness (have you ever cried at a sad movie, felt excited by a future event not yet taken place or shivered at the thought of your worst fear?).
It is widely accepted that these states are all forms of self-hypnosis. If you take this view you can easily see that you go into and out of mild hypnotic states on a daily basis - when driving home from work, washing the dishes, or even listening to a boring conversation. Although these situations produce a mental state that is very receptive to suggestion the most powerful time for self-change occurs in the trance state brought on by intentional relaxation and focusing exercises. This deep hypnosis is often compared to the relaxed mental state between wakefulness and sleep.
In this mental state, people feel uninhibited and relaxed and they release all worries and doubts that normally occupy their mind. A similar experience occurs while you are daydreaming or watching the TV. You become so involved in the onscreen antics
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